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Allen Clapp

 
Artist: Allen Clapp
Allen Clapp

Similar Artists:

The Prom, Papas Fritas, The Field Mice, The Higher Burning Fire, Tan Sleeve, Wall of Orchids, Pale Sunday, Cinerama, The Young Tradition, The Apples in Stereo

Influenced By:

Formal Connection With:

Relationship With:

Jill Pries
  • Active: '90s, 2000s
  • Genres: Rock
  • Instrument: Producer

Biography

Although Foster City, CA-native Allen Clapp only released one album and a couple of singles as Allen Clapp and His Orchestra, those records are among the best D.I.Y. pop releases of the '90s, with the album, 1994's One Hundred Percent Chance of Rain, a particular gem.

Clapp began his musical career with a high school garage band that included his friend Larry Winther on guitar. After a couple of years, the group split in 1989, with Winther and drummer Maz Kattuah going on to form the garage rock novelty the Mummies. Clapp spent a couple of years in an acoustic folk duo (a style resurrected on One Hundred Percent Chance of Rain's standout "Man and Superman") before starting to write lighter and poppier songs which he recorded by himself with a cheap Radio Shack microphone and cassette four-track. Kattuah released a single by Clapp, "Very Peculiar Feeling," on his Four Letter Words label in early 1992. On the strength of that single, Bus Stop Records signed Clapp to record an album.

Despite the band name, One Hundred Percent Chance of Rain is almost a solo project, with Clapp playing all of the instruments save for a handful of bass parts by his wife, Jill Pries. A masterwork of mature, well-realized melodic pop songs (leading off with the brilliant "Why Sting Is Such an Idiot," an answer song to "If You Love Somebody, Set Them Free") recorded in less than optimum lo-fi conditions, there's an emotional honesty and melodic richness to Clapp's songs that transcends the occasionally poor sound.

After a 1995 three-song EP for Darla Records featuring the sublime "Mystery Lawn," a wide-eyed love song to Pries that's among Clapp's best works, Winther and Kattuah rejoined their high school buddy and his wife. The foursome gigged around the Bay Area as Allen Clapp and his Orchestra for about a year until the swing revival started and people started taking the name seriously. Kattuah left the group during some contentious unreleased sessions with producer Jeff Saltzmann, who hired his former Cerebral Corps bandmate Bob Vickers to play drums on the session. The group fired Saltzmann but kept Vickers and renamed themselves the Orange Peels. In 1999, Bus Stop reissued the long out of print One Hundred Percent Chance of Rain. ~ Stewart Mason, All Music Guide
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Wikipedia: Allen Clapp
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Allen Gordon Clapp (born August 5, 1967) is the singer, guitarist and principal songwriter for the California rock band The Orange Peels. Since 1990, he has also periodically released material under his own name and under the moniker "Allen Clapp and his Orchestra."

Though Clapp's music is largely considered part of the Indie-pop genre, his music production techniques and lyrical content reflect a distinct sense of place—an attribute more common to indigenous folk music.

Contents

History

Clapp was raised two blocks from the San Francisco bay in Foster City, CA, where his mother and big sister taught him piano as a young child. He also studied the violin until his teen years, when he hooked up with likeminded musicians Dan Jewett, Larry Winther, Chris Boyke and Maz Kattuah, and formed a garage band alternately known as The Batmen and The Morsels.

The band disintegrated at the end of the 1980s, with Winther and Kattuah going on to form garage-rock band The Mummies, and Jewett leaving to form The Himalayans, a band which included a pre-Counting Crows Adam Duritz.

Clapp and Boyke split off to explore more esoteric, folky material in the duo The Goodfellows, who performed regularly around Berkeley (where Clapp had graduated in 1989 with a major in English Literature), and San Francisco. The two later added a bass player, Neal Trembath (Pullman), a drummer, Tom Freeman (The Muskrats), a harmonica player, Juliet Pries, and a manager, Alison Hefner (Dirty Deeds). They gigged around the Bay Area as, variously, "Huck," "Hunk," and "Hulk" (cf. Spinal Tap). Clapp released one flexi as Huck on Winter's Mist records out of San Jose.

In the midst of playing in those bands, Clapp had begun recording pop songs under his own name using a Radio Shack tie-clip microphone, a Roland RE-201 Space Echo and his Tascam Porta One four-track cassette recorder. The Roland Space Echo would become an important part of Clapp's production of musical soundscapes, helping him achieve a cool, coastal sound.

Even to the casual observer, he was barely equipped to record a decent demo tape. But Clapp's keen ear for melody and economical pop arrangements captured the interest of Kattuah, who started the Four Letter Words record label while he was in the Mummies. Four Letter Words issued Clapp's first-ever release, a song called "Very Peculiar Feeling" on a split flexi-disc with Japanese pop band "Bridge." (1990)

He followed up with his first marquis release, the one-sided 45, A Change in the Weather. The single quickly sold out, and attracted interest from the Iowa City-based Bus Stop Label. In 1992, Clapp released "Mystery Lawn," a 3-song EP on Bus Stop. Based on its success, Bus Stop owner Brian Kirk asked Clapp to release a full-length album—the label's first. In 1994, Clapp released "One Hundred Percent Chance of Rain" under the name "Allen Clapp and his Orchestra" (Bus Stop) on vinyl and CD.

Still recording on his four track with limited equipment, the album was praised as a lo-fi masterpiece. The album's second song, "Something Strange Happens" was considered a standout track, and has since appeared on various compilations and in two independent films.

Soon after, Allen formed a band with his wife, Jill, on bass, and his old former bandmates—now former Mummies—Winther on drums and Kattuah on guitar. Minty Fresh signed the group, and after a lineup change, the band rechristened themselves The Orange Peels, who have continued to change lineups and gone on to record for SpinART and Parasol records.

"One Hundred Percent Chance of Rain" was reissued in 2000 by Bus Stop on CD and LP. Clapp released a second solo album in 2002, a spacey soft-rock exploration for March Records called "Available Light."

Recent Projects

In fall of 2006, the Bus Stop Label released a compilation of Clapp's early singles, outtakes and unreleased tracks called "Something Strange Happens: Four-track Forecasts by Allen Clapp (1990-2000)." He is currently writing for a new Orange Peels record and producing albums in the garage of his modernistic Eichler tract home in Sunnyvale, California.

Clapp has engineered and produced all recordings under his own name, and the entire second album by The Orange Peels: 2001's So Far (SpinART Records). He has also worked as a recordist, producer and mix engineer with The Ocean Blue (2003's Waterworks EP), the eclectic Santa Cruz collective The Incredible Vickers Brothers, and is currently wrapping up production on The Ultraviolet Garden by San Francisco co-eds The Corner Laughers.

He recently finished production on the fourth album from his band The Orange Peels, "2020." The record is the second by the band to be engineered, produced and mixed by Clapp (2001's So Far was the first). The album is out Nov. 10, 2009 on Minty Fresh in all digital download formats. The band's own Mystery Lawn Music is selling physical CDs as well as a limited pressing of 180-gram vinyl.

Discography

Very Peculiar Feeling, 1990 (Four Letter Words, flexi)

A Change in the Weather, 1991 (Four Letter Words, 7" 45 rpm single)

Mystery Lawn, 1992 (The Bus Stop Label, 7" 45 rpm EP)

One Hundred Percent Chance of Rain, 1994 (The Bus Stop Label, LP, CD)

Brown Formica Table, 1995 (Elefant Records)

Whenever We're Together, 2002 (The Bus Stop Label, CD EP)

Available Light, 2002 (March Records, CD)

Something Strange Happens: Four Track Forecasts by Allen Clapp (1990-2000), 2006 (The Bus Stop Label, Digipak CD)

External links


 
 
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